Top 20 coffee shops in America

What is it about the perfect cup of coffee that gets us out of our homes and into our favorite local coffee shop? Is it the artisanal, hand-roasted beans? Perfectly balanced lattes prepared by trained professionals? Maybe it's just the comfy atmosphere of a great coffee shop that keeps us coming back for more.

The best spots have a bit of magic to them: ambiance with no pretense, friendly baristas, and of course, delicious coffee. Choosing your perfect shop takes time and patience, but once you've found it, you're set for life.

Luckily, The Daily Meal has done some of the legwork for you with our latest list of the top spots for coffee in America in 2014. Working off of last year's America's Best Coffee Shops of 2013, we scoured the nation from Portland to Florida looking for truly remarkable spots to pop into for a little cup of heaven. We measured the spots based on a wide range of criteria. First off, of course, we evaluated the coffee. The shops on this list use high-quality beans and have close relationships with their roasters — or are the roasters themselves. Next, we evaluated the culture of the shop. What's the point of going out for coffee if the space is dreadful? The shops on our list have created great coffee cultures, and even if they have multiple locations, each one feels like a unique, tight-knit community space.

We also took the baristas into consideration. Preparing and serving complicated coffee concoctions is an art form, and on our list, we've included some of the best-trained, most knowledgeable baristas around. Don't worry, we didn't forget the food! Although we didn't weight the food as heavily as the coffee, we certainly paid attention to it.

To help us determine which shops around the country really stand out as spectacular, we asked a panel of experts to help us cull through all of the excellent submissions.

Read on for the panel's top 20 coffee shops from coast to coast.

1. Everyman Espresso, New York

"If you're tired of nerdy coffee shops that deliver great drinks but make you feel like a moron, then get yourself to the super-friendly Everyman Espresso," wrote the Village Voice in its review — and we couldn't have said it better. We can appreciate a coffee shop that doesn't just cater to the new wave of coffee nerds, but hopes to share its love of coffee for, well, the everyman. Sam Lewontin, the lead barista trainer for Everyman Espresso said it succinctly in a blog post, when defending brew methods:

"Customers, generally, don't come into our stores looking for a lesson [in brewing methods]... What customers want, for the most part, is to be served tasty coffee in a way that makes them feel good about themselves."

That could be why there's no real menu in the shops, just a printed blurb about the coffee and locally sourced milk. With locations in both Soho and the East Village, Everyman Espresso serves its Counter Culture coffee with local milk from the Battenkill Valley Creamery in Salem, and a little bit of heart on the side.

2. Go Get Em Tiger, Los Angeles

"Charles Babinski and Kyle Glanville created a customer service experience that makes getting coffee seem as casual and fun as grabbing a drink at your local bar. I'll never go to Los Angeles again and not visit Go Get Em Tiger. This is absolutely one of my favorite coffee shops, from some of my favorite people in coffee." — Park Brannen, North East Barista Champion

What makes Ultimo tick — and brings in Philadelphians in flocks? Simplicity. Considered a standard bearer of coffee nationally, Ultimo makes a beautiful cup, has killer customer service and a relaxed, charming atmosphere.

"It's about a good cup of coffee and a good atmosphere in which to enjoy it," co-owner Aaron Ultimo put it simply in an interview. "In the end, I love the people in and around the industry, and I love the coffee that I get to drink every day."

5. Peregrine Espresso, Washington, D.C.

Peregrine not only makes great coffee, they have created an excellent atmosphere and provide stellar customer service. Said Dawn Shank, one of their award-winning baristas: "What makes Peregrine special? I would definitely say it's the energy between baristas and customers. I know that for a lot of baristas, talking about specialty coffee to customers is something that we really want to focus on and share without overly geeking out on customers, making it a welcoming environment where customers want to learn more about coffee and they don't feel intimidated or just turned off by something new or different."

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6. Joule Coffee, Raleigh, N.C.

"Five years ago you couldn't find spots that prepared both solid food and coffee. Just as we start getting to see this model work better, Joule really leap-frogged every concept I've seen: this comes from a restaurant group that understands hospitality just as much as they do quality food and beverage. This is perhaps my favorite place to eat and drink coffee in the country." — Park Brannen, North East Barista Champion

7. Milstead & Co., Seattle

Owner Andrew Milstead has been praised for taking the most difficult approach to the coffee shop model — the multi-roaster model — and excelling at it. That means Milstead balances a slew of different roasters, from roasters as big as Stumptown to as small as Heart Roasters in Portland, Ore., to put forth the best coffee possible — and that's not always as easy as it looks. Writes Jordan Michelman in Seattle Met, "Coffee professionals regard the multiroaster model as the most difficult to pull off. It's akin to a chef who works with different purveyors from week to week, a bartender who never sticks to the same base bourbon, or a band that plays a different set every night. The target is always moving, the parameters steadily shifting."

But it's Milstead's dedication to the coffees he serves that make it rank so highly on our list for its quality. With more than 30 different coffees on the menu to sample at a time, you'll never get a better education about coffee than at Milstead & Co. Stop by for a single-origin espresso, an Aeropress or Clever drip coffee, and consider yourself schooled in the art of coffee.

8. Panther Coffee, Miami

"Panther has two great shops that have been thoughtfully designed for their respective neighborhoods. There is a charm to each that is not only uniquely Miami, but with the personality of their respective communities, while being home to one of the best baristas in country, Camila Ramos." — Park Brannen, North East Barista Champion

9. PT's at College Hill, Topeka, Kan.

Kansas' most well-known roaster-turned-coffee-shop is a standard for coffee in the area, thanks to the dedication of the owners, Fred Polzin and Jeff Taylor. After opening PT's Caffe Espresso in 1993, the two quickly learned what it meant to serve great coffee, not mediocre coffee, which is why the duo soon began roasting their own coffee.

"We could have sold our small business many times and retired or launched another career that would have probably made us more money," Taylor has written about PT's. "But that's not what we're about. We are here to make great coffee and help our friends do the same."

Their dedication has paid off with some much-praised roasts (including an award for 2009 Roaster of the Year from Roast Magazine), as well as PT's at College Hill. The coffee bar serves Flying Monkey espresso as the standard for its stand-alone espressos, lattes and other drinks, as well as its drip coffees in Chemex, French press, Trifecta and pour-over. All that, plus a food menu that will make you drool (hello, Flying Monkey chef salad), and a rotating craft beer tap and cocktail menu. PT's at College Hill puts Topeka, Kan., on the coffee map.

10. Condesa Coffee, Atlanta

There's a lot to love at Condesa Coffee: a Counter Culture Coffee lineup of coffee brews, Intelligentsia teas, a killer cocktail and food menu, and a homey vibe that welcomes its neighbors. Condesa is well-regarded for the quality of its coffee (served both pour-over or Chemex), and has impeccable customer service. Perhaps it's the attention to detail that goes into every coffee (and coffee cocktails, yum) that pushes Condesa to the forefront of the growing Atlanta coffee scene.

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11. Artifact Coffee, Baltimore

Artifact's farm-to-table vibe, delicious food offerings (from the owners of Baltimore favorite Woodbury Kitchen) and roasts from Counter Culture have taken the city by storm: it's hard to find a better cup of coffee in Baltimore. That includes the espresso bar with some surprising additions to the list — a maple macchiato for instance — as well as pour-over coffee, and Japanese cold brew iced coffee (where the coffee is brewed directly over ice). Artifact is also dedicated to creating a sense of community, and has a calendar packed full of happenings, from knitters' meet-ups to readings to pop-up shops representing art students from MICA.

12. Anodyne Coffee Roasters, Milwaukee

"Some years ago during my first trip to Milwaukee, I was delighted to find the welcoming embrace of Anodyne. The great coffee matched with the warm demeanor of the staff makes for a great combination. Plus both of their locations offer a great space to unwind and enjoy some great beans." — Bill Walsh of The Pure Coffee Blog

13. Little Collins, New York

Voted one of Zagat's "Best Sleeps and Eats," Little Collins (named after a bustling street in Melbourne) strives to make customers feel "transported and completely at home." In addition to Counter Culture Coffee, Little Collins serves up homey dishes like cured ham and smoked brisket. Owner Leon Unglik explains, "We are serious about coffee and food but don't take ourselves too seriously. We want everyone who walks in to Little Collins to feel like a regular." Trust us, a bellyful of comfort food and warm coffee from Little Collins is just the stuff to turn first timers into regulars.

14. Heart, Portland, Ore.

Heart Roasters owns two beautifully minimalist locations in both East and West Portland where they serve up their Thrive Farmer's Good Food Award-winning house roasted coffee. But they're also willing to ship their beans around the country; they even sell the same equipment they use to brew their coffee on their website. Their shops are as sophisticated as their flavors, with Scandinavian chic décor and an in-house DJ on Friday afternoons.

15. Sunergos, Louisville

"No longer just known for baseball bats, Louisville has been really blossoming these past years, with wondrous roasters like Sunergos really shining the bright beacon of their tremendous coffee. The epitome of a home-grown operation, Sunergos has blossomed from a single bar to three locations and an expanding wholesale program." — Bill Walsh of The Pure Coffee Blog

16. Café Grumpy, New York

Café Grumpy may be now best known as Ray and Hannah's coffee shop on "Girls" to those outside of New York City, but New Yorkers know it is an excellent local shop with five locations — and a sixth on the way — that brew their own roasted coffee. Co-founder Caroline Bell told Food GPS in an interview that they started roasting their beans in 2009 in order to take coffee into their own hands and now, the Greenpoint company produces seven different roasts from Indonesia, Ethiopia, Honduras and elsewhere. Café Grumpy is especially beloved for its dedication to maintaining a true coffeehouse vibe. Gone are the laptop drones — only one of the shops has Wi-Fi. Instead, what you get is a relaxed atmosphere with real conversations hanging in the air. Said Bell to The New York Times, "I appreciate the idea of when you go someplace and it feels like a home away from home, but I don't think it should be a home office away from home." (Now, if only coffee shops could ban smartphones.)

17. Ritual Coffee Roasters, San Francisco

There is no shortage of good coffee in San Francisco — but Ritual Coffee Roasters is a truly excellent example. At the shop on Valencia Street in San Francisco, and its accompanying locations (a coffee bar in the Bayview neighborhood, a shipping container at Proxy in Hayes Valley and in the Oxbow Market in Napa), it's just coffee, pure and simple. It's no wonder the Valencia flagship attracts a wide range of residents, from yuppies to coffee geeks, which may explain the laid-back atmosphere. In a city that's buzzing with caffeine, Ritual will continue to hold its spot as the best.

18. Colectivo Coffee, Milwaukee

With locations throughout Milwaukee, Colectivo is a coffeehouse with a conscience. They've formed partnerships with many arts, environmental and social nonprofits, such as The Florentine Opera and the Urban Ecology Center, to enrich the community they serve. They're no slouch in the coffee department either; for 20 years, they've roasted, blended, packaged and shipped fair trade coffee from their Humboldt Boulevard location. In fact, if you're in the neighborhood on a weekday, stop by, grab a seat and watch the masters at work.

19. Pavement, Boston

It's no wonder comfy yet cool Pavement was named one of the "Top 10 Coolest Cafes in America" by Travel and Leisure. Each of its four locations strives to be a haven for coffee lovers of all kinds. As Pavement's Director of Operations, Andrew LoPilato puts it:

"Pavement combines the gritty vibe of its surrounding artistic community with a warm and inviting ambiance. Our cafés offer exceptional Counter Culture coffee and Rishi tea selections as well as a hearty breakfast bagel and lunch menu."

20. Spyhouse Coffee, Minneapolis

Many may not expect Minneapolis to be a hotspot for third wave coffee. On the contrary, the City of Lakes is no espresso wasteland — and Spyhouse epitomizes the coffee culture here. Spyhouse now has three locations, including a breathtakingly beautiful roasting facility/coffee shop (featuring a restored, vintage Probat UG 22 roaster) which opened in September of 2013. If you're not lucky enough to be able to check out the space itself, you can sign up for a subscription for their great coffee.